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The Personal Librarian
The Personal Librarian: Enhancing the Student Experience | Richard Moniz, Jean Moats
1 post | 1 read
The incredible shift in the provision of library services resulting from innovations such as online resources, mobile technologies, tablet computers, and MOOCs and hybrid courses makes it more challenging than ever for academic librarians to connect students with the information they need. Enter the Personal Librarian, a flexible concept that focuses on customizing information literacy by establishing a one-on-one relationship between librarian and student from enrollment through graduation. In this book the editors, with decades of library instruction and academic library experience between them, and their contributors Define personal librarianship and trace how it has developed within the broader context of the work that librarians doDemonstrate its radical potential to impact student learning, retention, and graduation ratesDiscuss how the concept relates to embedded librarianship and academic library liaisons, and the role of faculty and staffIllustrate how personalization can be supported by academic support centers, IT services, Student Affairs, and other college and university departmentsUse case studies from a variety of institutions to show how to develop and implement a Personal Librarian program By prioritizing relationships over merely providing access to information resources, the Personal Librarian can improve services while ensuring that students have what they need to learn and grow. This book shows how to make it happen.
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Based on the intriguing story of Belle de Costa Green, personal librarian to JP Morgan, this is a fantastic read. An exceptional business woman and trusted art curator, Belle was stand-out talent among men in a time when few women worked outside the home.

And she was hiding a secret- born of African-American parents, Belle and her mother and siblings were passing as white.

This historical fiction offers a fascinating look of life and love.